By Ebi Kesiena
The Joint National Association of Persons with Disabilities (JONAPWD) is championing the rights of women with disabilities in West Africa.
At a workshop in Abuja, aimed at enhancing their capacity to lead and organize representative organizations, the group said the initiative is part of the “Holding Rights, Leading for Rights” funding stream, supported by the Disability Rights Fund/Disability Rights Advocacy Fund DRF/DRAF, a U.S. Federal Government-funded project.
Speaking to journalists, National President of JONAPWD, Abdullahi Aliyu Usman, emphasized on the importance of this workshop in empowering women with disabilities from Ghana, Togo, Senegal, and Nigeria, adding that it will equip the women to spearhead wider opportunities.
Lamenting the limited opportunities available to women with disabilities, Usman maintained that at the end of the workshop, participants will gain the skills needed to advocate for their rights, challenge gender-based violence, and foster regional collaboration with mainstream women’s movements for greater disability inclusion.
While presenting a Keynote address, Dr. Joan Jummai Idonije, Director PRS Maryam Babangida National Centre for Women Development, underlined the progress in women’s rights in Africa, driven by the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). She stressed the continued need to emphasize disability rights to ensure equal access to opportunities for all individuals with disabilities.
Additionally, addressing a Press conference on the sidelines of the workshop, West Africa Program Manager for the Disability Rights Fund, Theophilus Odaudu, underscored the importance of supporting women with disabilities through participatory grant making and intersectional movement building.
He noted that it had become imperative to ensure that women with disabilities are fully integrated into mainstream women’s movements, hence the need for further advocacy for their rights and lead within civil society.
Odaudu noted that women with disabilities in West Africa and globally face multiple forms of discrimination and high rates of human rights violations. “Despite experiencing two to three times more abuse and violence than women without disabilities, they receive only a small fraction of human rights funding,” he said. As a result, they are often excluded from advocating for their rights and participating as leaders in civil society.
“As we know, women with disabilities in West Africa and across the globe faced multiple forms of discrimination and high rate of human rights violations and also receive only a very small fraction of human rights funding. As a result, they are excluded from advocating for their rights and participating as leaders in civil society and civil society species including within the disability rights and women rights movement”.
Therefore, Odaudu emphasized on the critical need to support the efforts of women with disabilities through Organizations of Persons with Disabilities (OPDs), particularly those focused on women in West Africa. He highlighted the importance of fostering cross-movement collaboration with women’s rights groups by providing resources and capacity development, adding that this approach will ensure that women with disabilities can lead alongside other stakeholders in the pursuit of equal rights.